622 research outputs found
Spontaneous thermal expansion of nematic elastomers
We study the monodomain (single-crystal) nematic elastomer materials, all
side-chain siloxane polymers with the same mesogenic groups and crosslinking
density, but differing in the type of crosslinking. Increasing the proportion
of long di-functional segments of main-chain nematic polymer, acting as network
crosslinking, results in dramatic changes in the uniaxial equilibrium thermal
expansion on cooling from isotropic phase. At higher concentration of main
chains their behaviour dominates the elastomer properties. At low concentration
of main-chain material, we detect two distinct transitions at different
temperatures, one attributed to the main-chain, the other to the side-chain
component. The effective uniaxial anisotropy of nematic rubber, r(T)
proportional to the effective nematic order parameter Q(T), is given by the
average of the two components and thus reflects the two-transition nature of
thermal expansion. The experimental data is compared with the theoretical model
of ideal nematic elastomers; applications in high-amplitude thermal actuators
are discussed in the end
UV-isomerisation in nematic elastomers as a route to photo-mechanical transducer
The macroscopic shape of liquid crystalline elastomers strongly depends on
the order parameter of the mesogenic groups. This order can be manipulated if
photoisomerisable groups, e.g. containing N=N bonds, are introduced into the
material. We have explored the large photo-mechanical response of such an
azobenzene-containing nematic elastomer at different temperatures, using force
and optical birefringence measurements, and focusing on fundamental aspects of
population dynamics and the related speed and repeatability of the response.
The characteristic time of ``on'' and ``off'' regimes strongly depends on
temperature, but is generally found to be very long. We were able to verify
that the macroscopic relaxation of the elastomer is determined by the nematic
order dynamics and not, for instance, by the polymer network relaxation.Comment: Latex (EPJE class) 12 figure
Fast microwave-assisted oxidation of 1,4-dihydropyridines with FeCl 3.SiO 2
Pyridine derivatives are easily obtained in high yields by microwave-promoted rapid oxidation of the corresponding 1,4-dihydropyridines with ferric chloride hexahydrate and silica gel under solvent-free conditions
Nematic elastomers with aligned carbon nanotubes: new electromechanical actuators
We demonstrate, for the first time, the large electromechanical response in
nematic liquid crystalline elastomers filled with a very low (~0.01%)
concentration of carbon nanotubes, aligned along the nematic director at
preparation. The nanotubes create a very large effective dielectric anisotropy
of the composite. Their local field-induced torque is transmitted to the
rubber-elastic network and is registered as the exerted uniaxial stress of
order ~1kPa in response to a constant field of order ~1MV/m. We investigate the
dependence of the effect on field strength, nanotube concentration and
reproducibility under multiple field-on and -off cycles. The results indicate
the potential of the nanotube-nematic elastomer composites as electrically
driven actuators
Photonic gaps in cholesteric elastomers under deformation
Cholesteric liquid crystal elastomers have interesting and potentially very
useful photonic properties. In an ideal monodomain configuration of these
materials, one finds a Bragg-reflection of light in a narrow wavelength range
and a particular circular polarization. This is due to the periodic structure
of the material along one dimension. In many practical cases, the cholesteric
rubber possesses a sufficient degree of quenched disorder, which makes the
selective reflection broadband. We investigate experimentally the problem of
how the transmittance of light is affected by mechanical deformation of the
elastomer, and the relation to changes in liquid crystalline structure. We
explore a series of samples which have been synthesized with photonic stop-gaps
across the visible range. This allows us to compare results with detailed
theoretical predictions regarding the evolution of stop-gaps in cholesteric
elastomers
Investigation of poly(2-methoxy-5-(2 '-ethylhexyloxy)-1,4-phenylenevinylene) prepared via a chloro precursor route
We report the characterisation of an insoluble MEHPPV (I-MEHPPV) prepared via a chloro precursor route. Optical absorption and emission spectra are discussed with reference to those of the common soluble variant. PL quantum efficiencies are also reported. Results obtained for single ITO/I-MEHPPV/A1 and double layer ITO/I-MEHPPV/electron transport layer (ETL)/A1 LED structures are discussed. Peak luminances of 800cd/m(2) are found for the multilayer device and a peak EL external quantum efficiency of 0.1 1% (power conversion efficiency of 1.5x10(-5)W/W) is obtained
Critical fluctuations and random-anisotropy glass transition in nematic elastomers
We carry out a detailed deuterium NMR study of local nematic ordering in
polydomain nematic elastomers. This system has a close analogy to the
random-anisotropy spin glass. We find that, in spite of the quadrupolar nematic
symmetry in 3-dimensions requiring a first-order transition, the order
parameter in the quenched ``nematic glass'' emerges via a continuous phase
transition. In addition, by a careful analysis of the NMR line shape, we deduce
that the local director fluctuations grow in a critical manner around the
transition point. This could be the experimental evidence for the Aizenman-Wehr
theorem about the quenched impurities changing the order of discontinuous
transition
Phase chirality and stereo-selective swelling of cholesteric elastomers
Cholesteric elastomers possess a macroscopic ``phase chirality'' as the
director n rotates in a helical fashion along an optical axis and can be
described by a chiral order parameter. This parameter can be tuned by changing
the helix pitch p and/or the elastic properties of the network. The
cholesterics also possess a local nematic order, changing with temperature or
during solvent swelling. In this paper, by measuring the power of optical
rotation, we discover how these two parameters vary as functions of temperature
or solvent adsorbed by the network. The main result is a finding of pronounced
stereo-selectivity of cholesteric elastomers, demonstrating itself in the
retention of the ``correct'' chirality component of a racemic solvent. It has
been possible to quantify the amount of such stereo-separation, as the basic
dynamics of the effect
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